MtBraun
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2017
- Posts
- 455
- Reaction score
- 306
- Location
- South Dakota
- First Name
- Matt
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- K10
- Engine Size
- 632
I often see parts of the above addressed, but I'm trying to determine a rear end/tire size combo that will fit the engine/tranny combo we plan for the 84 swb.
Engine will be a BB for sure, likely a stroked 427T mated to a TH400. Tire size will be either 38 or 40. I'm going back and forth on 3.73 or 4.10 gears. With the kind of torque we expect with this build it may not matter relative to drivability. There's about a 200 RPM difference between the two gear ratios at 60MPH.
I found a 14 bolt FF with 3.73 gears I can snatch for $100 which is the cheapest I've found. This would work well with current set up since we already have 3.73 gears in the 84 and would only need to get 8 lug hubs for the front.
I'm looking for what people have actually installed and used. What worked best and what would you do differently if anything? If you can't tell by the combo this is NOT a daily driver. Probably end up being a pavement queen with the occasional big tire smoke show.
Thanks to @vkh for his calculator spreadsheet. That is very helpful.
Engine will be a BB for sure, likely a stroked 427T mated to a TH400. Tire size will be either 38 or 40. I'm going back and forth on 3.73 or 4.10 gears. With the kind of torque we expect with this build it may not matter relative to drivability. There's about a 200 RPM difference between the two gear ratios at 60MPH.
I found a 14 bolt FF with 3.73 gears I can snatch for $100 which is the cheapest I've found. This would work well with current set up since we already have 3.73 gears in the 84 and would only need to get 8 lug hubs for the front.
I'm looking for what people have actually installed and used. What worked best and what would you do differently if anything? If you can't tell by the combo this is NOT a daily driver. Probably end up being a pavement queen with the occasional big tire smoke show.
Thanks to @vkh for his calculator spreadsheet. That is very helpful.